POT. Not so harmless to your health as you think

DigitalDrifter

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Feb 22, 2013
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Just wait a decade or so from now, when it's legal virtually everywhere in this country, and because of the availability use goes up, and more and more negative health impacts will start to be seen.
Get ready for old potheads demanding you pay for their fucked up respiratory system with your tax dollars.

Here's What We Know So Far About How Marijuana Affects Health


Many people think that smoking pot is harmless, but there's good evidence that the drug has at least some negative effects on health, a new review says.



Some people who smoke marijuana can become addicted, and use of the drug in the teen years has been linked with abnormalities in certain brain areas important for learning and memory, the review said. And even the immediate short-term effects of the marijuana, such as impaired thinking and coordination, can have consequences, including difficulty in learning in school and an increased risk of car accidents, the review said.



Regular marijuana smokers are also more likely than nonsmokers to have symptoms of chronic bronchitis, such as daily cough and phlegm production.






But whether the drug has long-lasting effects on cognition in adults remains controversial, with some studies suggesting the effects are persistent, and others saying the effects may be reversible, said Dr. Nora Volkow, the director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, who wrote the review along with her colleagues. More research is needed on this topic to provide a definitive answer, she said. [Trippy Tales: The History of 8 Hallucinogens]



Legal drugs, such as alcohol and tobacco, still account for a greater burden of disease than marijuana, but this is because legal drugs are more accessible, and thus more widely used, not necessarily more dangerous, Volkow said.



"As policy shifts toward legalization of marijuana, it is reasonable and probably prudent to hypothesize that [marijuana] use will increase and that, by extension, so will the number of persons for whom there will be negative health consequence," the researchers wrote in the June 5 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.



Here are a few more highlights from the review:
• Despite the popular belief that the marijuana is not addicting, about 9 percent of those who experiment with the drug, and up to 50 percent who use it every day, will become addicted.
• Smoking marijuana in the teen years is linked with brain abnormalities, such as fewer neural fibers in certain brain areas, decreased brain activity and a smaller hippocampus, an area important for learning and memory. These studies show an association, and cannot prove that marijuana is the cause of the brain abnormalities, or that the abnormalities are harmful. Still, one study found that people who used marijuana heavily as teens had IQ scores that were 8 points lower, on average, than those who didn't use the drug.
• People who use marijuana are at greater risk of abusing other drugs later in life, suggesting that marijuana maybe a "gateway drug." However, it could be that people who are more susceptible to drug use in general tend to start with marijuana because it is more accessible, and then move on to other drugs.
• In people who are genetically at risk for schizophrenia, smoking marijuana is linked with an increased risk of developing the condition. However, its possible factors other than marijuana are responsible for the link.
• A person's risk of a car accident doubles if that individual drives shortly after smoking marijuana.
• It's not clear whether smoking marijuana increases the risk of lung cancer compared with people who don't smoke, but studies suggest that the risk of lung cancer is lower in marijuana smokers than in tobacco smokers.

More research is needed on the ways in which government policies on marijuana affect public health, the researchers said. For example, it's not known if legalizing pot will lead to an increase in car accidents or an increase in the number of teens who use the drug, Volkow said.



The researchers noted that the potency of marijuana has increased over the last few decades — from about 3 percent THC (tetrahydrocannabinol, the active ingredient of marijuana) in 1980, to 12 percent in 2012. Because older studies were based on lower-potency marijuana, it's possible that more-harmful health effects may occur with today's marijuana.





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Here's What We Know So Far About How Marijuana Affects Health
 
Ha, conservatives only want freedom if they support what is released from govt. control...keep the booze. It's part of their religious rites....
 
I smoke on a regular basis and do not have symptoms of chronic bronchitis, my sister did cause she smoked cigs and was told to stop.
I smoke every day if I have it, if I don't no big deal. It's easier than stopping with daily booze use was.
MJ has a more beneficial affect on my chronic pain and nerve damage than the 4 types of pain killers I get from the doc. Also include that the muscle relaxation from MJ is better than the pills given to me by a doc.
Pot more potent? I started smoking in 1977 and smoke a lot of killer bud. I've tried to the over priced medical MJ and it's okay, but Columbia Bud from 35 years ago was better... much better..
 
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Ha, conservatives only want freedom if they support what is released from govt. control...keep the booze. It's part of their religious rites....

Don't include me in that, I would do in tobacco and booze in a heartbeat if I could, and in fact I'll be the first to admit tobacco and alcohol are much worse than pot. Now of course part of the reason is the availability of legal products versus illegal products.
Once pot is universally legal however, the gap will begin to close.
 
I smoke on a regular basis and do not have symptoms of chronic bronchitis, my sister did cause she smoked cigs and was told to stop.
I smoke every day if I have it, if I don't no big deal. It's easier than stopping with daily booze use was.
MJ has a more beneficial affect on my chronic pain and nerve damage than the 4 types of pain killers I get from the doc. Also include that the muscle relaxation from MJ is better than the pills given to me by a doc.
Pot more potent? I started smoking in 1977 and smoke a lot of killer bud. I've tried to the over priced medical MJ and it's okay, but Columbia Bud from 35 years ago was better... much better..

Well yeah, since it's not as bad as those others, lets just make it legal everywhere, then we'll have three unhealthy vices on our hands.
Brilliant.
 
Booze and tobacco help build this nation, it was vital for the early Americans so don't denigrate it too much...
 
I'm an adult, I can make my own decisions thank you very much.

What about the people around you that are forced to inhale your second hand smoke. Can they make their own decisions? However, eat all the pot cookies you want.
 

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